Europe shares buoyed by improved U.S.-China trade hopes

(Reuters) - European shares rose on Wednesday from the previous session’s more than one-month closing low on positive sentiment underpinned by easing fears over the path ahead for U.S.-China trade ties and strong results from some German firms.

Resolute earnings from Siemens and Wirecard aided sentiment, while the White House said China has indicated it wants to strike a trade deal.[MKTS/GLOB]

“All we need to know is how the next 48 hours unfold with China’s vice premier in Washington for talks,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at Oanda.

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He will travel to Washington on Thursday for two days of trade talks. As it currently stands, U.S. tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports will rise to 25 percent from 10 percent effective Friday, according to a notice posted to the Federal Register.

“I’m still under the belief that a deal is the default and that’s what people are expecting,” Oanda’s Erlam said.

Siemens posted better-than-expected quarterly earnings and said it would spin off its faltering gas-turbines business.

Payments firm Wirecard raised its 2019 outlook, as it sought to shake off allegations of fraud and false accounting to post a 40.7 percent rise in core profits in the first quarter.

Wirecard shares climbed 4.9 percent to a more than three month closing peak after its chief executive said the payments firm is mulling over buying back shares with some of the proceeds of a 900 million euro convertible bond that Softbank Group Corp will buy.

The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, April 4, 2019. REUTERS/Staff

Signs of Brexit-linked uncertainty capped sentiment towards London-traded stocks. The FTSE 100 index recovered from early losses to add 0.2 percent, amid a half-percent slide in the pound. Exporters on the benchmark broadly benefit from a softer pound which swells their overseas earnings’ value. [.L][GBP/]

Bank stocks moved in the other direction, extending losses as they slipped 0.3 percent.